S: I. M. O. N. SHOAH: I NTERVENTION. M ETHODS. DOCUMENTATION. Wolfgang Schellenbacher From Political Activism to Disillusionment Austrian Socialist Refugees in Czechoslovakia, 1934–1938 Abstract The political exile of approximately 2,000 Austrian socialists in Czechoslovakia after the Austrian “civil war” in February 1934 stands apart from other refugee movements in Central Europe of the time, most noticeably due to the initially sympathetic approach Czechoslo­ vakia took towards those who fled, especially compared to the different approach towards Austrian Jews after the ‘Anschluß’. This article combines Austrian and Czech sources to focus on the geography of escape and exile and the smuggling of propaganda as the main part of resistance work. Mapping various networks within the small border region and the individual stories of refugees shows in detail how the initial support for Austrian socialist refugees on behalf of the Czechoslovak social democrats soon gave way to disillusionment by rank­and­file refugees as exile networks dissolved, funds dwindled, a lack of perspectives became apparent, and political radicalisation increased. In the 1930s, Czechoslovakia became one of the most important destinations for Austrian refugees – both for political refugees after February 1934 and for Jewish refugees after the ‘Anschluß’ of Austria in 1938. In terms of political exile after 1934, Czechoslovakia was key for the refugees both in terms of numbers and political net­ works. For former fighters of the Republikanischer Schutzbund (Republican Protec­ tion League) – the paramilitary organisation of the social democrats – in southeast Austria, especially Carinthia and Styria, Yugoslavia became an important place of refuge. Maribor/Marburg turned into the key contact point for refugees and political work in Yugoslavia, while additional, smaller centres existed in Ljubljana/Laibach and Belgrade. Since the political decision makers were situated in Brno/Brünn, Maribor functioned as a branch office of Brno. No full study of Austrian exile in Czechoslovakia has been undertaken to date. This is seen most obviously with the research series Österreicher im Exil (Austrians in Exile) by the Documentation Centre of Austrian Resistance (DÖW) that began in 1980 and – although including some documents on refugees in Czechoslovakia – is still missing a volume on Czechoslovakia.1 The exile and activities of refugees in the border region – aside from the political and intellectual elite – has not yet been the focus of scholarly research. After 1945, personal memoirs by politically persecuted functionaries were published relating to Austrian political refugees in Czechoslovakia after the February Uprising 1 So far, the series includes volumes on the Soviet Union, the USA, Mexico, Belgium, France, and the United Kingdom, some of which are referred to below. Even the special case of Spain was formally published within this series. Wolfgang Schellenbacher: From Political Activism to Disillusionment CONTEXT 78 S: I. M. O. N. SHOAH: I NTERVENTION. M ETHODS. DOCUMENTATION. 1934.2 Then from the 1970s and 1980s onwards, numerous research was done on the exile experience and illegal work of social democrats, the officials of the Revolution­ ary Socialists, the Schutzbund, and the Auslandsbüro der österreichischen Sozial­ demokraten (Foreign Office of the Austrian Social Democrats, ALÖS) in Brno.3 How ever, these descriptions of the exile of Austrian and German refugees in Czechoslovakia between 1933 and 1939 often focussed on the activities of politi­ cians, artists, and intellectuals.4 Recent literature such as Unsichere Zuflucht (Uncer­ tain Refuge), published in 2012 by Kateřina Čapková and Michal Frankl, is an exception to this trend, as it concentrates on ordinary refugee experiences.5 Their research, however, concentrates on German refugees after 1933, rather than on Aus­ trian political refugees. The history of Austrian refugees in 1934 coincides with a general shift from a sympathetic approach towards refugees to a more restrictive refugee policy, both in Czechoslovakia and in Central Europe more widely. This shift was experienced by the rank­and­file refugees involved in political work by smuggling propaganda material and who later, once political and social networks began to disintegrate, found themselves facing ever worsening living conditions. This article will therefore focus on the situation of refugees who were not part of the political and intellectual elite. In order to look at the refugee networks and the activ­ ism as well as the growing disillusionment of the refugees, the article focusses on activities in the Czechoslovak/Austrian border region – a region soon came to be characterised by illegal border crossings, becoming a gateway for resistance work in Austria and refugee camps. The Impact of the February Uprising in 1934 In March 1933, the Austrian government under Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuß used a loophole in the parliamentary rules to dissolve the Austrian parliament. The Kriegswirtschaftliches Ermächtigungsgesetz (War Economy Empowerment Act)6 passed in 1917 and intended for use in times of war, was implemented to severely 2 For example Joseph Buttinger, Am Beispiel Österreichs. Ein geschichtlicher Beitrag zur Krise der sozialis­ tischen Bewegung, Cologne 1953; Otto Bauer, Die illegale Partei, Paris 1939; Julius Deutsch, Ein weiter Weg. Lebenserinnerungen, Zurich/Leipzig/Vienna 1960; Otto Leichter, Zwischen zwei Diktaturen. Österreichs Revolutionäre Sozialisten 1934–1938, Vienna/Frankfurt/Zurich 1968. 3 For example Karl R. Stadler, Opfer verlorener Zeiten. Geschichte der Schutzbund­Emigration, Vienna 1974; Vojtech Blodig, Die tschechoslowakischen politischen Parteien und die Unterstützung der deutschen und ös­ terreichischen Emigration in den 30er Jahren, in: Peter Glotz (ed.), München 1938. Das Ende des alten Europa, Essen 1990, 251­270; Barry McLoughlin/Hans Schafranek/Walter Szevera, Aufbruch – Hoffnung – Endsta­ tion, Vienna 1997; Manfred Marschalek, Untergrund und Exil. Österreichs Sozialisten zwischen 1934 und 1945, Vienna 1989; DÖW (ed.), volume ed. by Barry McLoughlin/Hans Schafranek, Österreicher im Exil. Sowjetunion 1934–1945, Vienna 1999; Ernst Hanisch, Der große Illusionist. Otto Bauer (1881–1938), Vienna 2011; Christoph Höslinger, Die ‘Brünner Emigration’ als diplomatischer Konfliktstoff zwischen Wien und Prag, in: Thomas Winkelbauer (ed.), Kontakte und Konflikte, Horn/Waidhofen an der Thaya 1993, 413­428. 4 For example Gertruda Albrechtová, Zur Frage der deutschen antifaschistischen Emigrationsliteratur im tschechoslowakischen Asyl, in: Historica 8 (1964), 177­233; Miroslav Beck/Jiří Veselý, Exil und Asyl. Anti­ faschistische deutsche Literatur in der Tschechoslowakei, 1933–1938, Berlin 1981; Heinz Spielmann, Koko­ schka in Prag, in: Peter Becher/Peter Heumos (ed.), Drehscheibe Prag. Zur deutschen Emigration in der Tschechoslowakei 1933–1939, Munich 1992, 87­96; Jan M. Tomeš, John Heartfield und der Künstlerverein Mánes, in: ibid. 5 Kateřina Čapková/Michal Frankl, Unsichere Zuflucht. Die Tschechoslowakei und ihre Flüchtlinge aus NS­ Deutschland und Österreich 1933–1938, Vienna 2012. 6 Das Gesetz vom 24. Juli 1917, mit dem die Regierung ermächtigt wird, aus Anlass der durch den Kriegszu­ stand verursachten außerordentlichen Verhältnisse die notwendigen Verfügungen auf wirtschaftlichem Ge­ biete zu treffen, available under http://alex.onb.ac.at/cgi­content/alex?apm=0&aid=rgb&datum=19170004&s eite=00000739&zoom=0 (19 September 2018). Wolfgang Schellenbacher: From Political Activism to Disillusionment CONTEXT 79 S: I. M. O. N. SHOAH: I NTERVENTION. M ETHODS. DOCUMENTATION. limit fundamental democratic rights and to set the country on the path towards an ‘authoritative corporative state’, based on the model of Fascist Italy.7 On 31 March 1933, the paramilitary Schutzbund was banned, followed by the Communist Party on 26 May. Founded by the Social Democratic Workers’ Party in 1923 in reaction to the conservative nationalist Heimwehr militia, the purpose of the Schutzbund was to provide security at party demonstrations and to defend the re­ public. The need to uphold the socialist experiment of Red Vienna and its successes in rapidly improving the living conditions of the working class and the hope to ex­ pand this system to all of Austria in the context of an increasingly unsettled political system motivated many workers and members of the manifold socialist organisa­ tions – especially workers’ sports organisations – to join the Schutzbund.8 Therefore, the number of Schutzbund members rose quickly, reaching about 80,000 in 1928. By the time it was banned, membership was still around 60,000.9 Despite growing pressure, the social democratic party leadership was still taken by surprise when fighting broke out in Linz on 12 February 1934 and quickly spread to other industrial areas – especially Vienna. The well­armed troops of the Heimwehr fascist paramilitary group – supported by the army and the police – were nevertheless able to quell the revolt quickly. In re­ sponse to the unrest, martial law was imposed, nine members of the Schutzbund were executed, and mass imprisonment in jails and detention camps followed. Due to the hopelessness of the situation and the fear of persecution under the Dollfuß regime, many people fled while the conflict was still ongoing. Not all of the refugees registered with the exile organisations and refugee committees because they had relatives in Czechoslovakia or Czechoslovak citizenship.
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